Sweet lumpy minion, you're the only one that understands. Probably 'cause I haven't sucked the brain out of you yet.

Glory ,'Potential'


We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good  

There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."


Jesse - Jul 07, 2004 3:39:17 pm PDT #4733 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

The Great Brain books screwed me up, because they were the first place I saw the word "gentiles," so I thought non-Mormon was the general meaning. Oops.


askye - Jul 07, 2004 3:46:31 pm PDT #4734 of 10002
Thrive to spite them

I haven't read all of Roald Dahl's books, I need to. But of the ones I read when I was a kid: James and the Giant Peach, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator, and The Fantastic Mr. Fox, Mr. Fox was my favorite.

Also I liked Great Glass Elevator more than Chocolate Factory. The Great Glass Elevator is just so weird and strange with pills that make the grand parents lose age until the are minuses and the elevator going off in space.

And then I have a Children's Lit book from the class I took at college that has Roald Dahl's Little Red Riding Hood and the Wolf poem.


Tam - Jul 07, 2004 3:48:21 pm PDT #4735 of 10002
"...Singing their heads off, protected by the holy ghosts, flying in from the ocean, driving with their eyes closed." - Patty Griffin "Florida"

She's seriously ill, damn it. She had a major heart attack that left her with very limited heart function, and she's not a good candidate for a transplant because of obesity. Grr.

Oh! I didn't know! That makes me very sad.


Polter-Cow - Jul 07, 2004 5:39:47 pm PDT #4736 of 10002
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Anyone read Perdido Street Station and The Scar by China Mieville? I was just highly recommended them. (Well, the first vehemently, and the second she's just starting since it's the sequel.) Apparently it's genre-busting, and one of the genres it busts is steampunk, which I didn't even know existed (cyberpunk except...not...cyber).


JoeCrow - Jul 07, 2004 5:54:12 pm PDT #4737 of 10002
"what's left when you take biology and sociology out of the picture?" "An autistic hermaphodite." -Allyson

I've read Perdido Street Station. Quite good. Kinda like what Big Fat Fantasy would be like if the seminal fantasy text was Gormenghast instead of Lord of the Rings. Inventively baroque is probably the best way to put it.


Polter-Cow - Jul 07, 2004 5:58:40 pm PDT #4738 of 10002
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Kinda like what Big Fat Fantasy would be like if the seminal fantasy text was Gormenghast

Yeah, the Amazon blurb mentioned that too. I haven't read it.


Micole - Jul 07, 2004 6:00:20 pm PDT #4739 of 10002
I've been working on a song about the difference between analogy and metaphor.

Steampunk is ... huh, easy to point to, hard to describe. SF, fantasy, or alternate history where technology is more accelerated than it was in history; there's some cyberpunk cross-over, but they're not necessarily related. Contradicting that, one of the most famous steampunk work is The Difference Engine by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling, cyberpunk's most famous writer and most dedicated propagandist respectively, which is set in a 19th-century Britain undergoing an accelerated Industrial Revolution because Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace were able to come up with workable computers and computer languages. It's got many historical personages and characters from period novels wandering through.

Other significant works of steampunk are K.W. Jeter's Infernal Devices, most of Tim Powers' early work (esp. The Anubis Gates), some of James Blaylock's early work, and possibly Michael Swanwick's The Iron Dragon's Daughter, depending on how flexible you are in your definitions.

I hadn't heard Mieville's books put in quite that subgenre, but I can see the similiarities. Well, from what I've heard -- I've only read his first novel, King Rat, which is pretty much a straightforward urban horror/fantasy, if an unusually gritty one.


Maysa - Jul 07, 2004 6:00:48 pm PDT #4740 of 10002

I like Danny the Champion of the World best of all of Dahl, I think, because it is the gentlest of his stories.

I always hope that if I ever have kids, I'll be like Danny's dad.

Has anyone here read any BALzac? (Sorry, I can't think his name without hearing The Music Man in my head.) I have an urge to read some of his stuff, but I have no idea which books are considered his best, or what the best translations are.


Polter-Cow - Jul 07, 2004 6:04:34 pm PDT #4741 of 10002
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Has anyone here read any BALzac?

Didn't he write that...one...thing?

*Googles*

Uh, okay, I don't know what he wrote that's famous either, even though his name sounds familiar.


Consuela - Jul 07, 2004 6:16:08 pm PDT #4742 of 10002
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Has anyone here read any BALzac?

Balzac wrote dozens of novels. I've read Zola, which was good. Lots of family and social conflict. Poor father whose daughters married well think he embarrasses them, so when he comes to visit they hide him away and make him come in through the back door, that sort of thing.